The Jeffersonian Solution
http://thedeliberateagrarian.blogspot.com/2009/03/vv.html
(My N.Y. Times Op-Ed)
(My N.Y. Times Op-Ed)
I
wrote an Op-Ed for the New York Times. I mailed it in. They never
printed it. So I am publishing it here. Who needs the New York Times
anyway?

The
original strength of our American republic was found in the ability to
supply our own needs. That is the very definition of independence. We
provided our own form of government, our own energy resources, our own
manufacturing, and we grew an overabundance of our own food. We were a
self-sufficient nation.
This
condition of national independence was the natural outgrowth of
America’s many independent farming communities. The vast majority of
early Americans lived on small farms and homesteads, providing their own
food, shelter, clothing, and most other necessities from their own
land. Today, however, less than 2% of our population is involved in the
work of agriculture, and that agriculture has greatly changed. Now it’s
called agribusiness and it is dependent on enormous, unsustainable
imports of foreign oil. Subsistence farms have become rare as hen’s
teeth.
Thomas
Jefferson, primary author of the Declaration of Independence, believed
that a citizenry which worked the land, drawing sustenance directly from
the earth, was the surest support of our free and independent nation;
that such agrarianism engendered a healthy civic virtue. After all,
self-reliant people don’t need or want government handouts, and they are
not easily manipulated by scheming politicians.
In his book, Notes on Virginia, Jefferson made a remarkably prescient statement:
“Dependence
begets subservience and venality, suffocates the germ of virtue, and
prepares fit tools for the designs of ambition.” [Note: "venality" means corruption]
Slowly
and surely, over the course of two centuries that which was abundantly
clear to Jefferson has become a truth no longer self evident. Once
thrifty, resourceful and largely self-reliant on their own land,
Americans are now mostly crowded into cities and suburbs, playing their
specialized roles in the corporate-industrial drama, dependent on a
global network of industrial providers and so many forms of government
subsidy. We have become the land of the dependent and the home of the
helpless.
It
is no coincidence, then, that America as a whole has evolved into a
needy nation, a dependent nation, a debtor nation and, as a result, an
increasingly weaker nation.
Industrialization
has brought us to servitude. First, unwary Americans willingly
exchanged their independence bit by bit for tempting morsels of comfort
and ease. Further along the path, as the germ of virtue was suffocated
and venality dominated, much more freedom was (and is) demanded in the
name of supposed benevolence, or to protect us all from a host of
spectral boogiemen. We’ve come to the point in America where individual
freedom is little more than a lovely but quaint phantasm.
So
it is that the forces of industrialism, allied with government and all
manner of techno-wizardry, are advancing on numerous fronts,
implementing with scientific deviousness the goal of ever more
centralized control over We its Subjects. Unprecedented designs of
ambition are circling overhead.
This
is what happens when a civilization, blinded by generations of
industrial and technological hubris, separates from its agrarian roots.
In a sad paradoxical twist, Americans have come to love the conditions
of their modern subservience. This is not what the Founders had in mind.
It is not the way free men live.
Popular
opinion dictates that organized political action alone will bring the
changes that America needs. But this is a false hope. Fundamental and
significant change will never come from government. It will come only
when American citizens change themselves. We must break away from the
various industrial-world dependencies and reconnect to the agrarian
wellspring. Americans must return to the land, re-embrace simplicity,
self-sufficiency, independence, and personal responsibility—one person,
one family, at a time.
The
good news is that this is already happening to a small degree. A new
American yeomanry of landed smallholders is rolling up its sleeves and
working in earnest to take care of itself, apart from industrial and
government dependencies. I am among them.
My
family lives on 1.5 rural acres in the Finger Lakes Region of New York
state. I built my small but comfortable home with my own hands. We heat
with a basic wood stove. We raise chickens for meat and eggs. Our
freezers are packed with vegetables from our garden and venison
harvested from the woods and fields around us. There are bushels of
homegrown potatoes and onions in the basement. Our pantry shelves are
lined with jars of home-canned applesauce, tomatoes, pickles, green
beans, and so much more. We have little money, but no debt.
If,
as Jefferson so rightly warned, dependence begets subservience, then it
follows that independence begets freedom. This is true on a national
and personal level. The path back to individual liberty begins with
awareness, determination, and a small piece of land. The rural sections
of America are vast, much of the land is inexpensive, and it is full of
productive potential. If husbanded with care, the soil will yield an
abundance. The land is calling freedom-loving Americans back to itself
and forward to a better reality. Do you hear it?



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